Gorospe Luis, Raman Subha, Echeveste Jon, Avril Norbert, Herrero Yolanda, Herna Ndez Susana
Department of Radiology, La Paz University Hospital, Madrid, Spain.
Nucl Med Commun. 2005 Aug;26(8):671-87. doi: 10.1097/01.mnm.0000171779.65284.eb.
Accurate diagnosis and staging in oncology is essential in the evaluation of cancer for optimal patient outcome. Conventional imaging techniques, such as computed tomography (CT), rely basically on morphological changes for tumour detection. Clinical experience, however, shows that morphological criteria may be misleading and may not always allow differentiation between benign and malignant lesions. Positron emission tomography (PET) with [F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) is rapidly gaining a critical role in the clinical evaluation of patients with cancer. However, PET lacks anatomical landmarks for topographic orientation, and identification of abnormal glucose metabolic activity in regions close to organs with variable physiological FDG uptake can be difficult. To overcome these difficulties, a combined PET/CT scanner that acquires both functional (PET) and CT images has been recently developed. Proper interpretation of PET (and PET/CT) images requires a thorough understanding of the normal physiological distribution of FDG in the body, along with a knowledge of frequently encountered physiological variations in FDG distribution, and recognition of non-malignant causes of FDG uptake that can be confused with a malignant neoplasm. In addition, because of the utilization of the CT transmission information for the correction of the attenuation of the PET emission data (and for the reconstruction of the PET images), some artifacts may be generated. As a consequence, CT based attenuation correction of PET images may result in erroneous PET/CT interpretations. The aim of this extensively illustrated paper is to demonstrate several potential pitfalls encountered during the interpretation of PET/CT images so that radiologists can avoid false positive diagnoses and recognize inherently non-specific findings on PET/CT images obtained for oncological diagnosis.
肿瘤学中的准确诊断和分期对于评估癌症以实现最佳患者预后至关重要。传统的成像技术,如计算机断层扫描(CT),基本上依靠形态学变化来检测肿瘤。然而,临床经验表明,形态学标准可能会产生误导,并不总能区分良性和恶性病变。[F]氟脱氧葡萄糖(FDG)正电子发射断层扫描(PET)在癌症患者的临床评估中迅速发挥着关键作用。然而,PET缺乏用于地形定位的解剖学标志,并且在具有可变生理性FDG摄取的器官附近区域识别异常葡萄糖代谢活性可能很困难。为了克服这些困难,最近开发了一种同时获取功能(PET)和CT图像的PET/CT联合扫描仪。正确解读PET(和PET/CT)图像需要全面了解FDG在体内的正常生理分布,以及了解FDG分布中常见的生理变异,并识别可能与恶性肿瘤混淆的FDG摄取的非恶性原因。此外,由于利用CT透射信息来校正PET发射数据的衰减(以及用于PET图像的重建),可能会产生一些伪影。因此,基于CT的PET图像衰减校正可能会导致PET/CT解读错误。这篇配有大量插图的论文的目的是展示在解读PET/CT图像过程中遇到的几个潜在陷阱,以便放射科医生能够避免假阳性诊断,并识别在用于肿瘤诊断的PET/CT图像上本质上非特异性的表现。